foal

English dictionary entry

Meanings

noun
  1. A young horse or other equine, especially just after birth or less than a year old.
  2. A young boy who assisted the headsman by pushing or pulling the tub.
verb
  1. To give birth to (a foal); to bear offspring.

Pronunciation

/fəʊl/ [fɔʊɫ] /fɒl/ /fɐʉl/ /foʊl/ [foɫ] en-us-foal.ogg

Word forms

foal foals foale fole foaling foaled

Etymology

From Middle English ffoole, foale, fole, fool, foole, fowle, from Old English fola, from Proto-West Germanic *folō, from Proto-Germanic *fulô (“foal”), from pre-Germanic *pl̥Hon-, from Proto-Indo-European *pōlH- (“animal young”). Cognates Cognate with Saterland Frisian Foole (“foal”), West Frisian fôle (“foal”), Dutch veulen (“foal”), German Fohlen, Füllen (“foal”), Low German Fohl (“foal”), Vilamovian fyłn (“foal”), Danish føl (“foal”), Faroese fyl (“foal”), Icelandic foli, fyl (“foal”), Norwegian Bokmål fole, føll (“foal”), Norwegian Nynorsk fole, fyl, føl (“foal”), Swedish fåle, föl (“foal”); compare also Latin pullus (“young animal”), Greek πουλάρι (poulári, “foal”), Albanian pelë (“mare”), Armenian ուլ (ul, “kid, young of a goat”). Related to filly.

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